Industry Links

RESTON, VA | Registration is now open for the Print & Packaging Legislative Summit 2018, coming June 19–20 to Washington, D.C. The Legislative Summit will bring printers, packaging converters, technology and consumable suppliers, and allied interests together for public policy and political education, as well as direct interaction with members of Congress and the Administration to discuss current policy issues.

Representing a $1.4 trillion share of the US economy, the printing, packaging, and mailing industry employs 7.5 million workers. At the same time, summit organizers says, it is challenged by a transformed market where digital electronic communication competes directly with traditional paper-based mail and advertising, a shortage of qualified workers, and laws and regulations that stifle business growth. At the event, industry executives will engage in a one-of-a-kind legislative experience, networking with peers and colleagues from across the nation, and experiencing face-to-face meetings designed to advocate for action on critical issues that impact the industry. Some of those issue are the following:

Boosting long-run US GDP by making 100% Expensing permanent;

Keeping rising postage rates in check, by enacting postal reform legislation that would financially stabilize the US Postal Service;

Preserving access to important paper-based information and services for Americans who prefer them or depend on them, by endorsing the efforts of the Coalition for Paper Options;

Bringing printing, imaging, and mailing industry employers together with qualified workers, by supporting community-based educational programs that prepare job-seekers with the skills needed to be successful in modern graphic communications careers;

Working to facilitate the possibility of association health plans (AHPs);

Expanding global markets and helping US manufacturers compete more effectively for the 95% of the world market outside of the United States, by supporting fair trade agreements and opposing economically harmful tariffs